INTERVIEW: Prince Daddy & the Hyena are slacker punk for the soul
   When it comes to origin stories, most bands engage in some sort of long-winded ramble about how their previous bands fell through, or how their members just started playing together for fun and it developed into something serious. There isnât anything wrong with those sorts of answers, as the reality of most band formations is rather boring. But itâs a question that must be asked for the sake of background detail even though it doesnât produce as many interesting anecdotes as one might think. Â
   At least in my experience with interviewing bands, the question of âHow did you guys form?â usually triggers some sort of reaction in the intervieweeâs brain, in which he/she believes itâs time to get serious and deliver some sort of thesis-like explanation that neither of us really care about, even though weâre both pretending we do. Hell, itâs that unspoken execution of faux professionalism that dampens the atmosphere of entire interviews and results in both parties leaving unsettled. Â
  However, when a band speaks of their formation with the unfiltered honesty of âWe all think itâs really cool to go to strangersâ houses, smoke weed, and look through their videogame collections,â it immediately flags them as something special.
   Along with that beautiful string of words, the members of Prince Daddy & The Hyena- vocalist/guitarist Kornelious P. Jenkins, guitarist Cameron Handford, bassist Zakariya Houacine, and drummer Alex Ziembiec- eagerly talked about alien abductions landing them a record deal, hiding out in the back room of a wild house party to play Smash Bros, and the lore behind their obsession with California Pizza Kitchenâs Spicy Chipotle Chicken Pizza. The gang was sprawled throughout the dark confines of a âwell-wornâ utility van after their set in Rochester, NY in late December.
   Soon after forming in late 2014, the band self-released their debut EP âSkip Cutscenes! Blow Loud!â and began playing house shows around the East Coast, building a reputation in their home city of Albany, NY for high energy performances. Less than a year later, the band released their first proper EP âAdult Summersâ via the rising Connecticut label Broken World Media, which is owned by Derrick Shanholtzer-Dvorak of The World is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die. Broken World Media has released a slew of notable emo/punk/indie albums over the past few years by bands such as Sorority Noise, Rozwell Kid, Old Gray, Soda Bomb, and many of TWIABPâs own releases.
   P. Daddy said Broken World has really helped their band by âhooking us up with really nice peopleâ and âshowing us the people who donât know who Prince Daddy is, but know who Broken World is,â said Houacine and Jenkins, respectively.
   Jenkins, lounging in the passenger seat of the van while packing what might be a contender for the worldâs smallest one-hitter, also described the unusual manner by which they became a part of the Broken World roster.
   âDerrick was getting abducted by aliens and there were four of us, and only one of them, so us breaking free wasnât a sign of us being stronger, âcause thereâs four of us. But we broke free and got them out and they were like, âI really owe you guys for getting us back to earth. I really like it here and I think Broken World can really use a band like P. Daddy.ââ
   In regards to the release of âAdult Summers,â Handford gave an equally straight-faced response. âWe hadnât had music in so long and we knew the album wouldnât be coming for a while âcause we wanted to record it really nice. So we just recorded the EP with our friend Drew to hold people over.â
   âWe wrote our full length before we wrote Adult Summers. We wrote Adult Summers in like 2-3 days,â added Jenkins.
   The long-awaited full-length, set to be released this Spring via Broken World, was recorded by Joe Reinhart, guitarist of emo alums Algernon Cadwallader and up-and-coming indie rockers Hop Along. The record will be titled âI Thought You Didnât Even Like Leaving.â For a band who described their sound as âFuzzy Weezer with influences of early-2000âs broken Gameboy Advance noisesâ and âCereal on the couch watching Ed, Edd, n Eddyâ rock, they all had less-than-ridiculous things to say regarding the album.
   âItâs winter versus summer. If âAdult Summersâ is summer, then imagine this is winter. Itâs still fuzzy and punky but itâs way darker,â said Houacine.
   âBesides a couple songs, itâs more straightforward and less sporatic,â said Ziembiec.
   âItâs more of a pop record but itâs still crazy and loud and energetic,â said Jenkins
   âThereâs a few songs where we actually have choruses. Itâs crazy,â said Handford.
   Like âAdult Summers,â P. Daddy agreed that fans should expect their Weezer, Green Day, and Jeff Rosenstock influences to bleed through. Their knack for humorous self-deprecation is something that set âAdult Summersâ apart and the new record is sure to contain a similar approach lyrically, but with a darker edge to it.
   Jenkins said that âAdult Summersâ is about âPartying, smoking weed, beaches and aliens,â whereas âI Thought You Didnât Even Like Leavingâ tackles âDepression, anxiety, my couch, dependency, laziness, and manic depression.â
   âI feel like itâs just a lot of shit that everyone deals with. Growing up and turning into a different type of person. Realizing everything does not work out perfectly,â said Houacine.
   P. Daddy capture their vivacious live aesthetic on recording and pair that with lyrics as laughable as they are worryingly relatable. That itself is enough to make them a worthwhile checkout on both Bandcamp and the live circuit. In their eyes, however, the real distinction between them and other bands is their unearthly ability to munch.
   âNo one can eat like we can eat. Itâs pretty embarrassing actually,â said Jenkins.
   Check out the bandâs own original recipe for what they call âThe McClusterâ and be sure to catch them on their upcoming tour with Oso Oso at a venue near you!
      The McCluster
        One McDouble
        One McChicken
        McDonaldâs mozzarella sticks
         âItâs like McDonaldâs is hugging this mozzarella, gooey centerâ- Zakariya HouacineÂ